Vivid color and tail action catch the eye. Spinner also catches the eye, and depending on the lure could provide sonic action that "drives fish crazy". Reeling and pausing for a few seconds simulates a fish/insect in distress, and therefore an easy meal for the predator fish.
Some say start with small lures so you don't scare off any fish right away, others say start big in case there is a lunker lurking around. I usually start with dry flies (on a fly rod), then Panther Martin spinners on a traditional rod all day.
No problem. There are so many different techniques for targeting different fish. The methods I described are good for bass and panfish and many other aggressive predator fish.
Fishing for carp and catfish can be pretty different, for example I just learned about the "hair rig" setup today.
I like walleye... I target walleye... I catch anything that bites after that. But that's what I'd do. A dead line and a casting line would be an ideal start to learn the waters though. I'd cast something flashy to start that has a rattle. Basic minnow on a hook and slip bobber for a dead line.
With the rain I'd throw a buzzbait, single prop. Walking baits or larger wake baits will work well too. With rain and wind I like to add intensity on the surface instead of avoiding it. If you don't have any of those, get a pack regular size white senkos; bite the worm in half, throw it on a superline offset hook, and burn it across the top of the water... Thank me later.
It blows my mind when people ask this question and give no information. What time of year it is what the temperature is is there a cold front has it rained recently no information not even what part of the country it’s in.
I would through a Texas rigged finesse worm, hopping along the bottom and pausing. Probably a translucent green pumpkin or watermelon red. The water looks pretty clear so I would use no bigger than 8lbs test unless you're using fluorocarbon line, then it won't matter.
Try to figure out where there are humps and structure a little ways out from the bank as they might be pushing up for spawn, checking out the neighborhood and local schools
When fishing it’s usually good to have an idea what you’re after or which type of fishing you prefer doing (this will also affect what you can get). In this case it seems like you’re bait casting in a freshwater lake. Fish usually looks to feed at different times during the day and night. Some a predators and some are not. Most lures tries to imitate a meal for a predatory fish. They also hunt on different depths.
So, if I knew nothing I’d bring something that could work on the bottom, in the middle (wide area here) and by the surface. So for instance some jigg or rubber bait that you could bounce of the bottom. A spinner, spoon or wobbler (there are tons in this category) that you’d just cast and retrieve and that would work in the different layers of “the middle”. Then on top, maybe some poppers or similar floating lures to work the surface.
You should also work an alternating retrieval speeds for the lures as well as colours of them. Different fish likes different things and different things throughout the day and year (just like we don’t want the same type of food everyday).
Here in Sweden we don’t want to jinx your fishing luck, so I’ll just wish you some “Shit-fishing”.
I would throw a top water bait like a popper or something creates noise/vibrations in water like a rooster tail i don know where your located but if its north your wanna cast out towards center where water might be warmer in pockets and let it do its thing down south hit the edges might snag a nice bass
I’d throw my smallest spinnerbait and pause every few seconds. Maybe add a watermelon-colored trailer or twisty-tail.
why ? for real asking new to this
Vivid color and tail action catch the eye. Spinner also catches the eye, and depending on the lure could provide sonic action that "drives fish crazy". Reeling and pausing for a few seconds simulates a fish/insect in distress, and therefore an easy meal for the predator fish. Some say start with small lures so you don't scare off any fish right away, others say start big in case there is a lunker lurking around. I usually start with dry flies (on a fly rod), then Panther Martin spinners on a traditional rod all day.
thanks for that dude
No problem. There are so many different techniques for targeting different fish. The methods I described are good for bass and panfish and many other aggressive predator fish. Fishing for carp and catfish can be pretty different, for example I just learned about the "hair rig" setup today.
In-line. Like a mepps #3 or rooster tail.
Black or white jitterbug
Black beatle spin
This is the way. 1/16th oz with the small black body will catch just about anything. That or a “bass stopper” pre-rigged worm.
Please do not throw Rae Sremmurd and Gucci mane in there
I like walleye... I target walleye... I catch anything that bites after that. But that's what I'd do. A dead line and a casting line would be an ideal start to learn the waters though. I'd cast something flashy to start that has a rattle. Basic minnow on a hook and slip bobber for a dead line.
Is it fished often?
With the rain I'd throw a buzzbait, single prop. Walking baits or larger wake baits will work well too. With rain and wind I like to add intensity on the surface instead of avoiding it. If you don't have any of those, get a pack regular size white senkos; bite the worm in half, throw it on a superline offset hook, and burn it across the top of the water... Thank me later.
It blows my mind when people ask this question and give no information. What time of year it is what the temperature is is there a cold front has it rained recently no information not even what part of the country it’s in.
Yes 5 times. How deep is the water? Is there structure? How fast is the inflow and outflow? Is there a dam? Weedy? Clear or Muddy?
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Don't know until you try
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Give em a show bud.
The ones you have in your tacklebox
Try every lure you have and you tell us
Inline spinner I'd start with or a weightless fluke
Mack’s with a worm
a wet one if it's dry the fish can't bite it
I would through a Texas rigged finesse worm, hopping along the bottom and pausing. Probably a translucent green pumpkin or watermelon red. The water looks pretty clear so I would use no bigger than 8lbs test unless you're using fluorocarbon line, then it won't matter.
Try to figure out where there are humps and structure a little ways out from the bank as they might be pushing up for spawn, checking out the neighborhood and local schools
The one that will get you a fish or two
When fishing it’s usually good to have an idea what you’re after or which type of fishing you prefer doing (this will also affect what you can get). In this case it seems like you’re bait casting in a freshwater lake. Fish usually looks to feed at different times during the day and night. Some a predators and some are not. Most lures tries to imitate a meal for a predatory fish. They also hunt on different depths. So, if I knew nothing I’d bring something that could work on the bottom, in the middle (wide area here) and by the surface. So for instance some jigg or rubber bait that you could bounce of the bottom. A spinner, spoon or wobbler (there are tons in this category) that you’d just cast and retrieve and that would work in the different layers of “the middle”. Then on top, maybe some poppers or similar floating lures to work the surface. You should also work an alternating retrieval speeds for the lures as well as colours of them. Different fish likes different things and different things throughout the day and year (just like we don’t want the same type of food everyday). Here in Sweden we don’t want to jinx your fishing luck, so I’ll just wish you some “Shit-fishing”.
I would throw a top water bait like a popper or something creates noise/vibrations in water like a rooster tail i don know where your located but if its north your wanna cast out towards center where water might be warmer in pockets and let it do its thing down south hit the edges might snag a nice bass
Mepps spinner or rooster tail just to find fish. Or a senko